3q8g
From Proteopedia
Resurrection of a functional phosphatidylinositol transfer protein from a pseudo-Sec14 scaffold by directed evolution
Structural highlights
FunctionPublication Abstract from PubMedSec14-superfamily proteins integrate the lipid metabolome with phosphoinositide synthesis and signaling via primed presentation of phosphatidylinositol (PtdIns) to PtdIns kinases. Sec14 action as a PtdIns-presentation scaffold requires heterotypic exchange of phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) for PtdIns, or vice versa, in a poorly understood progression of regulated conformational transitions. We identify mutations that confer Sec14-like activities to a functionally inert pseudoSec14 (Sfh1) which seemingly conserves all of the structural requirements for Sec14 function. Unexpectedly, the 'activation' phenotype results from alteration of residues conserved between Sfh1 and Sec14. Using biochemical and biophysical, structural, and computational approaches, we find the 'activation' mechanism reconfigures atomic interactions between amino acid side chains and internal water in an unusual hydrophilic microenvironment within the hydrophobic Sfh1 ligand-binding cavity. These altered dynamics reconstitute a functional 'gating module' that propagates conformational energy from within the hydrophobic pocket to the helical unit which gates pocket access. The net effect is enhanced rates of phospholipid-cycling into and out of the Sfh1* hydrophobic pocket. Taken together, the directed evolution approach reveals an unexpectedly flexible functional engineering of a Sec14-like PtdIns transfer protein - an engineering invisible to standard bioinformatic, crystallographic and rational mutagenesis approaches. Resurrection of a functional phosphatidylinositol transfer protein from a pseudo-Sec14 scaffold by directed evolution.,Schaaf G, Dynowski M, Mousley CJ, Shah SD, Yuan P, Winklbauer EM, de Campos MK, Trettin K, Quinones MC, Smirnova TI, Yanagisawa LL, Ortlund EA, Bankaitis VA Mol Biol Cell. 2011 Jan 19. PMID:21248202[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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